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The Monday Morning Memo


The image above is a screen shot of the final line of the poem in the video below, a 1-minute reading of In Flanders Fields, that snow-cold burst of verse that triggered the tradition of the red poppy. 

Joan Smith, the British journalist we quoted in today’s Monday Morning Memo, shares the logic behind her reluctance to wear the poppy: 

“I don’t doubt many individuals wear the red poppy with pride. What I don’t understand is why they want everyone else to wear one, regardless of how they feel towards war and its horrors. I’m not a pacifist, but traditional Remembrance Day ceremonies make me uncomfortable, turning the dead into two-dimensional ‘heroes’ when I know that many died in agony, confusion and despair.”

Joan Smith presents us with an interesting thought. But I don’t agree with it. I am a romanticizer, a colorizer of facts. Yes, I will make a hero out of someone who didn’t feel like a hero or want to be a hero. On certain days, I will even make a hero out of someone who did nothing heroic. But that’s not the point I wish to make right now. The point is this: Joan Smith’s perspective is valid. It is fair. It’s okay that she feels that way. I can even see her point a little. There’s nothing wrong with her. She is not my enemy. We don’t have to think alike.
 

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Random Quote:

“Few men who come to the islands leave them; they grow grey where they alighted; the palm shades and the trade-wind fans them till they die, perhaps cherishing to the last the fancy of a visit home, which is rarely made, more rarely enjoyed, and yet more rarely repeated. No part of the world exerts the same attractive power upon the visitor, and the task before me is to communicate to fireside travellers some sense of its seduction, and to describe the life, at sea and ashore, of many hundred thousand persons, some of our own blood and language, all our contemporaries, and yet as remote in thought and habit as Rob Roy or Barbarossa, the Apostles or the Caesars.”

- Robert Louis Stevenson, In the South Seas, a documentary of his travels in the islands from 1888 until 1894, when he died there.

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